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President
Obama's July 1
speech reaffirming his commitment to
"comprehensive immigration reform" a.k.a.
amnesty completely ignored
unemployment, needless to say.
But unemployment
is not ignoring him and his Administration. The June
employment data, released the next day, were bad—and
immigrant displacement of American workers appears
to have resumed with a vengeance.
Nonfarm payrolls
shrank by 125,000 in June. After adjusting for the
downsizing of
government census takers and other public sector
jobs, the June job count was up by 83,000.
Even that is disheartening: the median forecast from economists and economic forecasting firms was that the U.S. would add 110,000 private-sector jobs.
The economy needs to add about 130,000 to 150,000 jobs a month just to keep pace with new workers entering the market (still including, incredibly, an estimated 40,000 immigrants). The labor pool is already overflowing with about 15 million unemployed job seekers.
The average duration of unemployment is now 35.2 weeks. A year ago it was 24.4 weeks.
The "other"
labor survey, of households rather than businesses, was
even more downbeat. It reported a June job loss of
301,000.
Here is the action for the month:
Our measure of native labor displacement, the VDARE.COM American Worker Displacement Index (VDAWDI), uses Hispanics as a proxy for immigrants because some 40% of them are immigrants, retreated to 125.7 in June from 126.1 in May:

VDAWDI is calculated like this:
We've always said Hispanic employment is an imperfect proxy for our primary interest: foreign-born employment and its implications for job prospects of native-born workers. In recent months the employment report has (finally!) begun tracking foreign- and native-born workers. The data are not seasonally adjusted, making month to month comparisons tricky. But we can compare this June with last June:
|
Employment Status by Nativity, June 2009-June
2010 |
||||
|
(numbers in 1000s; not seasonally adjusted) |
||||
|
|
Jun-09 |
Jun-10 |
Change |
% Change |
|
|
Foreign born, 16 years and older |
|||
|
Civilian population |
35,258 |
36,155 |
897 |
2.5% |
|
Civilian labor force |
24,135 |
24,688 |
553 |
2.3% |
|
Employed |
21,787 |
22,541 |
754 |
3.5% |
|
Unemployed |
2,348 |
2,148 |
-200 |
-8.5% |
|
Unemployment rate (%) |
9.7 |
8.7 |
-1.0 |
-10.3% |
|
Not in labor force |
11,123 |
11,467 |
344 |
3.1% |
|
|
Native born, 16 years and older |
|||
|
Civilian population |
200,397 |
201,535 |
1,138 |
0.6% |
|
Civilian labor force |
131,786 |
130,079 |
-1,707 |
-1.3% |
|
Employed |
119,039 |
117,342 |
-1,697 |
-1.4% |
|
Unemployed |
12,747 |
12,737 |
-10 |
-0.1% |
|
Unemployment rate (%) |
9.7 |
9.8 |
0.1 |
1.0% |
|
Not in labor force |
68,611 |
71,456 |
2,845 |
4.1% |
|
Source: BLS, "The Employment Situation - June
2010," July 2, 2010. Table A-7. |
||||
In other words, over the past 12 months:
This suggests that our VDAWDI measure has actually understated the displacement impact of immigration.
It occurs to us that the absence of seasonal adjustment does not negate the validity of month to month comparisons, so long as the bias affects native and foreign-born workers equally. After all, our interest is not just economics but fairness—i.e., how native workers fare relative to their foreign-born counterparts.
That said, June was particularly bad for native-born workers:
|
June Job Trends: Foreign- v Native-born |
||||
|
|
May '10 |
June '10 |
Change |
% change |
|
|
Employment (mils.) |
|||
|
Foreign-born |
22,125 |
22,541 |
416 |
1.88% |
|
Native-born |
117,372 |
117,342 |
-30 |
-0.03% |
|
|
Unemployment rate (%) |
|||
|
Foreign-born |
8.6 |
8.7 |
0.1 |
1.16% |
|
Native-born |
9.5 |
9.8 |
0.3 |
3.16% |
|
Not seasonally adjusted. |
||||
While (seasonally unadjusted) foreign-born employment rose
416,000, or nearly 2 percent, native-born employment
declined by 30,000 in June. Native unemployment rose by
0.3 points, while foreign-born unemployment was up by
0.1 point.
Overarching everything is the burgeoning population gap
between these groups.
Over the past year the foreign-born population of
working age rose 2.5%—more than four-times the 0.6% rate
for natives.
It's interesting that June appears to have been a relatively
poor month for Hispanics but a very good one for
foreign-born workers. One possibility: native-born
Hispanics are
losing out to foreign-born Hispanics.
Why shouldn't Hispanics get to share in this
quintessentially American experience—being
displaced by immigrants?
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email him) is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.